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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Molly Powell

‘I ranked all 272 of London’s tube stops – these are the best and worst’

Tom now has over 50,000 followers on social media - (Collect/PA Real Life)

A tube station enthusiast has taken social media by storm by ranking all 272 of London’s tube stops.

Tom Rees, a 29-year-old marketing operations manager from rural Shropshire now living in Islington, north London, grew up captivated by how the tube allows Londoners to “zip around the city”.

After moving to the capital in 2017, he set out to visit every tube station two years later, armed with a GoPro to document the “good, the bad, and the ugly” and build a detailed mental map of London.

In 2023, he turned his footage into TikTok, Instagram and YouTube videos under the handle @vaguely.mundane, ranking stations and amassing 50,000 followers across all platforms with his most popular video earning more than two million views on Instagram.

His favourite tube stops include Uxbridge, Chesham, and Canary Wharf – while less favoured spots like Stonebridge Park and Barking make the bottom tier.

Tom’s favourite tube stops include Uxbridge, Chesham, and Canary Wharf (Collect/PA Real Life)

Now exploring London’s mainline stations, he is uncovering hidden gems such as a lighthouse in Tower Hamlets playing a 1,000-year-long song and a Roman bath under an office block in Billingsgate.

Tom said: “It was probably around when Francis Bourgeois was blowing up, so I knew there was an audience for it, and I’d not seen anybody doing a review of these stations with a more subjective take.

“I couldn’t believe it when my videos started getting views, but there’s a real community of people who follow my videos now.”

Despite “not being interested in trains themselves”, Tom finds the way the tube enables so many people to “zip around the city” fascinating, especially given his more rural upbringing in Shropshire, where there was “very little public transport”.

He added: “The idea of just being able to turn up on a platform and be whisked away to a distant corner of this massive city, it was always something that I found very exciting when I visited London growing up.”

Tom moved to London in 2017 (Collect/PA Real Life)

When Tom moved to London in 2017, he began to wonder what the areas at the end of the tube lines – such as Chesham, Epping, or Upminster – were like.

In 2019, he set himself the challenge of visiting every tube station, spending around 20 minutes wandering the area before moving on to the next station.

“I was mostly interested in discovering all these places, the good, the bad, the ugly, and in a broader sense, it’s definitely given me a much better mental map of London,” Tom said.

To document his journey, Tom used a GoPro to capture footage of each station, creating “video proof” of his travels.

Tom has always been fascinated by the tube (Collect/PA Real Life)

He joked: “I was clearly on some sort of ego trip where I thought that someone might ask me about it.

“I had all this footage on a hard drive, and I didn’t do anything with it, I didn’t have any plans for it, it was literally just a record.”

But, when Tom visited the final station on his list, Oval on the Northern Line, he found the experience “anticlimactic”.

Throughout his career, Tom has worked on social media marketing and found the field captivating.

He realised it was important to “identify a niche” to grow an audience on platforms like TikTok, and was inspired to create his own outside of work.

So, he decided to use the footage he already had, and “repurpose it” into TikTok and Instagram videos, by adding in snippets of him talking to the camera, giving his opinion on each station.

Tom has said his videos have helped build a community (Collect/PA Real Life)

Around April 2023, Tom created a TikTok and Instagram account under the handle @vaguely.mundane and began uploading his videos every other day until September 2024.

Tom used a tier system to rank the stations from best to worst, finding it impossible to pick just one favourite station, which he said would be like choosing a favourite song, as “it changes all the time”.

He said: “It’s all gut feeling but if a station hasn’t been looked after very well, or it’s been allowed to get rusty, or the signs are all sun-bleached and stuff like that, that’s not going to help.

“On the flip side, if there’s some sort of novel artwork or architecture going on, that’s all very good stuff.

“Examples that I do really like, and are top-tier, would be something like Uxbridge, which has stained glass windows, I think I probably likened it to a cathedral.

Tom has ranked all 272 of London’s tube stops (Collect/PA Real Life)

“A different sort of station might be something like Chesham, the very furthest station on the whole tube network in Buckinghamshire.

“You kind of go winding through fields and hills on the tube train – it’s all very romantic and a contrast to that inner-city bustle.

“But then you’ve also got Canary Wharf, which is sci-fi and grand Millennium architecture.”

He thinks the “northern leg of the Bakerloo line” often looks “knackered”, particularly disliking Stonebridge Park, and he finds Barking “quite a miserable place”.

He added: “High Green Islington, I gave that an E tier, so the bottom tier, mainly because if you compare it to old pictures of how it looked in Victorian times, for instance, it’s so far removed from that – it’s quite sad now to see how far it’s fallen.”

In summer 2024, Tom also visited all 15 of Glasgow’s subway stops in one afternoon.

Now, he has moved on to rating London’s mainline stations, setting himself the challenge of “finding an interesting place” around each one.

Tom is now exploring London’s mainline stations (Collect/PA Real Life)

“It is definitely going to be tricky in some places, but I’ll give it a go,” he said.

So far, he has been to The Trinity Buoy Wharf lighthouse – a former experimental lighthouse that now hosts a 1,000-year-long musical composition that’s been playing since 1999.

He also discovered Billingsgate Roman House and Bath underneath an unassuming office block in the city.

Looking to the future, Tom’s goal is ultimately to “have fun” and he does not intend to make content creation his full-time job.

He added: “I would have to be a lot bigger than I am to feel comfortable transitioning into doing it full time.

“The thing I’m proudest of is the community it’s helped build – there’s people who know each other through liking my tube reviews and my videos, and are now friends.

“That makes me feel happy.”

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